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tv   [untitled]    November 18, 2012 7:30am-8:00am EST

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if i tell try. to get one of these to travel to one every morning let's with a cost of about forty thousand dollars i should start saving money. for moscow this is artsy on brewery sushi by the sex scandal which claimed the head of the cia former general david petraeus turn on the man but took over from him as commander of the u.s. military in afghanistan this week general john allen's career is now in trouble after it was revealed that you had also exchanged e-mails with a tampa socialite linked to patricia's extramarital affair the former cia boss stepped down after admitting to a covert relationship with his biographer paula broadwell choose mean it looked up
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by the f.b.i. over allegations that she gained access to classified data through patrol yes he however denied any leaks and some suggest there are far worse crimes to investigate when it comes to u.s. generals than sex or e-mail scandal. patrol yes you know led the surge in iraq and you know was the brainchild of the surge in afghanistan these are two college fees which required retired arming and training radical islamic center fighters the afghan local police which the tree is described as the linchpin of the afghan strategy these are a group of people that have been accused of murder rape they want to you know the last year they were accused of kidnapping a boy in mailing hammering nails into the bottom of its feet through the use of torture in fact and the same type of thing that happened in iraq when you know.
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betrayer organized a cia to sunni civil war that ended in hundreds of thousands of lives lost and no reaction to all of that bloodshed easily was described as a war hero he was betrayed in a positive light all it takes to be portrayed in a negative light in the american mind is a sex scandal. let's get some other international headlines for you this hour with the world update at least three a killed many more injured by an explosion in a town in central iraq. is said to have targeted police officers and was reportedly carried out by a suicide car bomber who ran a vehicle full of explosives into a police checkpoint iran scuse me iraq has been struggling to find stability after nato coalition forces withdrew from the country following years of occupation. barack obama is in thailand on his first official trip abroad since being reelected his three country tour of southeast asia as part of a shift in american foreign policy but with a deeper commitment to
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a region that seeing growing chinese influence a bomber is due to travel to come bodie and next and more than become the first ever u.s. president to visit me and. a massive fire in a bangladesh shanty town has killed eleven and injured many more but five women and four children are among the dead with over five hundred homes have been mean leveled in a densely populated area near the capital officials believe a cigarette or mosquito coil may have caused the blaze. a top flight of russian a premier league football match was cut short after a flare fired from the stands a badly injured one of the players the police have launched a criminal investigation and say the found responsible may face up to five years behind bars thomas reports anton shewn who is the goalkeeper for do you know moscow has been injured doctors have looked at him and they say that he has been blinded by this incident in france to see him one i took you back through this matches
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between st petersburg and moscow demoed took place in the here do you area which is in the moscow region friends from st petersburg started putting the pitcher with fireworks and flares one of those flares or fireworks went off in the face of the goalkeeper he went down on the pitch in pain and then after he was down on the grass and they had stopped the game it is reported that the fans continued to pelt objects at the goalkeeper at that time so the decision was made by the officials and the referees to start that game it's unclear whether or not that game will be continued at a later date or if it will be given a technical defeat if you will now turn choose between st petersburg transit moscow for. and have gone on since around two thousand and eight they've been at a high level at that time there was a banner that was placed at a game in st petersburg that was questionable got fans upset and more recently in september between a game between a torpedo and you know there was
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a similar incident with fireworks being thrown onto the field but much more said that time and in the same month do you know more fans then attacked their own headquarters saying that if the team doesn't play better they will start destroying property as well so there's a big problem basically between a football fans and the teams they supposedly support but their actions at this point in time are being more disruptive to the game than being helpful now as of now there are no laws in russia that are designed to protect football teams or to punish fans right now that is being talked about as a possibility in the near future. reporting western e.u. countries used to be a top destination for immigrants seeking a better life but that's been changed with the misery of the debt crisis and now europeans themselves are looking elsewhere to find a place to make a living. and those low terry teahouse anyone in need is welcome here in the queue for food traditionally
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immigrants from so many that and this is new some europeans as well. who want if father of three came here from spain and live in months again after he lost his job and gained debts and stand to do it but i was happy i came here with hope i was forced to leave spain due to the economic crisis and bank recession here i work and make three thousand years a month and i can pay my debts in spain. is not queuing for food she cooks originally from colombia she first immigrated to spain but the crisis pushed to move further on she now works at a cafe in always famous new community and while she serves those who come here to admire the world famous. scream she says her life if only they knew it would probably provoke an even stronger impression on the visitors. it's hard it's not as easy as they show it on t.v.
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you go from one country to another like a rolling stone you have kids and nothing to feed them with and no job. in september the unemployment rate within the eurozone hit a record high of eleven point six percent in the seventeen countries united by a common currency for more than eighteen million people are now out of work that's an increase of around five thousand every day since august during the years of gross year of wasn't desperate need of a cheap labor force and therefore provided immigrants from all over the globe with work but with the worst economic crisis since the second world war now in the gulf in the continent not only is the able to provide jobs for outsiders it cannot even create works for locals turning the tables and sending many of those in a search for a better life abroad or to no way for example and no euro zone and only used state two factors some analysts say that have averted the scandinavian country from disaster. in our region krone is one of the safest currencies in europe many people
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here in germany and in other european countries believe that our monetary system is being pressed up against the wall and this makes us weak is when the economic crisis fully engulfed greece last year brussels was on alert then a bailout treaty brought hope and relief apparently for mature space in portugal joined the club and someone will still be others to come let's face it i know switzerland and norway are not a you members they're doing better than any other european country as we do denmark in the czech republic. countries and we never hear things about the whole system when it's steals all the major powers from states political economic diplomatic and military. if you give it to brussels and washington is doomed with german chancellor angela merkel seen at least five more years will be needed to recover and it's clear countries like no we will not have a deficit in labor force at least some decades grief notion r t from you know we
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germany and france. i don't r.t. dot com right now thousands stage a march through dublin in protest at archaic irish abortion laws that led to the death of a woman who was denied to help to terminate her pregnancy also. a gun store owner in arizona publishes an ad in the local newspaper telling president obama supporters they are not welcome in a shop and find more of that online. it is over a year ago now since the occupy wall street movement emerged as a mass protest deal against corporate greed in the u.s. the campaign was almost immediately met by a harsh crackdown from the earth already however since then activists a far more creative ways to deliver their message. explains. an artist carving out his college debt number and walks over seventy thousand
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dollars from columbia and for a master's of fine arts an award winning actress teaching a class at the new york film academy what happens when you intensely focus on an object and to form a wall street employee volunteering and post hurricane sandy relief efforts do you know the name of your driver and what could they possibly have in common their support for the occupy wall street movement. from day one of occupy the with the wings of the american dream and now from his brooklyn studio facing wall street know a fisher and organizer of occupy museums wants to redefine the meaning of money the other side of this sort of america sublime dream is you know all this and kind of lack of opportunity that we're starting to see you know it's no displays his work in shows all over the world trying to generate discussion about how an artist's work affect society had really you know been affected by the two thousand economic
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crash in the our world. is just as much as on wall street and the other kind of world is a very sort of go of yourself mentality right now and i think the society is breaking apart because of that i'm living in the slice of the life i used to have lunch baker contributed to occupied by starring in an independent film as the wife of ponzi schemer bernie madoff now in jail for one hundred fifty years the film ruth made off occupies wall street highlights wealth inequality through humor in this case really made off even in the middle of zuccotti park would be concerned about things that only the one percent could possibly be concerned about blanche believes occupy gave voice to a majority that wasn't heard before there has to be some kind of a new model going forward where this kind of economic disparity. is dealt with in a way that benefits everyone you can't sweep it under the carpet and ignore it anymore
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need to endure something after seven years at morgan stanley alexis goldstein could no longer tolerate the greed and toxicity of wall street she quit and is now an author and an occupy organizer on wall street there's this attitude if you get screwed by somebody it's because you are stupid optimal poker playing is take your best friend for all they're worth the same is true on the street. the occupy wall street movement started as an ocean of people on the streets and in camps and that tactic of holding public spaces the police have made it at least with their seeable future impossible we've kind of adapted in this way where we're organizing more specific themes. themes that could be while on the way to bringing much more tangible results. like hurricane relief occupy has been praised for doing a better job of the government agency feeling much as well as projects like strike jets well as many as one in seven americans are founded by debt collectors occupies
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raising money to try to abolish the debt burden for as many people as they can by buying distressed debt for pennies on the dollar and then wiping it out. the crowds may be gone from the streets but those fighting for the ninety nine percent continue working by themselves and in groups to put an end to the world of the powerful beating down on the voiceless and to try to build a socially responsible community is that you're going to hurt new york. and up next an interview with a person and so forth richard which is mother's sir richard branson. his day starts at five am. even earlier in the winter tending to his flock of story hundred sheep in the mountains and plains of t.v.
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thirty five years old it wasn't the life he dreamt of having studied accounting but he dition and familial duty dictated that he would take on the care of these animals after his father has just made camp at their winter farm stead setting up his ute judicial to fenian round tent made of disc ins. back amongst his family as his job is a lonely one and tough going out in all weathers braving streams of plus to minus forty degrees celsius says that i'm with them there are certain difficulties there's not enough time for everything i'm almost alone my sister works with my mother my mother is seventy five she's very old and i miss mountains when i'm in town and i spend a lot of time here. most of us simply carrying out the work that his father did and his father before him nothing has changed over many many centuries and that's half the problem it's hard work and many people don't want to come into the industry now and that's where they fit their could die out altogether. it's difficult to manage
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everything alone i used to have people who helped me but they were no good they didn't take care of the sheep with all their heart they hurt the cattle. with new people leaving them coming to the countryside the regions government is having to act making the life of the herd in more attractive than promising largest. and lie stocks and organizing cooperatives for the sale of de products to ensure the herd it gets a higher fair price i sympathizes with those youngsters leaving for an easier more profitable life stay in the public's capital. so he doesn't who wishes to join them he enjoys his pastoral way of life looking for a helper who shares his enthusiasm but more time on his hands he says matter of fact he can start to look for you wife.
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a surprise and thank you so much for joining me today now i'd like to start and go back when you were fifteen years old you decided to leave school you want to start a magazine pretty much from took on the world exactly happened but you have managed to achieve a lot of things are you happy all the way the world is right now is a good person i like the what the world is extremely good to me. and i've had the joy of a life i think of everybody everybody i know. i'm still the love again i spoke quite a lot of my time now. issues like conflict resolution issues that the world. and obviously you know the world if you live in syria today the world is not a happy place at all. we have a wonderful organization called the elders that are trying to help. resolve that
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called. like in fact lakhdar brahimi he's one of the elders you know beating people rushing to try to try to get agreement as quickly as possible so that we can spare the the people of syria. and i think if we can get russia or russia on board and america are on board we. the syrian government on board hopefully we can get or get that promise of how the site actually work well the elders are actually going to station the twelve people that nelson mandela set up. and they. have people like president carter. nelson mandela. archbishop tutu people with high bar of authority they work is that as a as a as a group to try to resolve conflicts and then sometimes the individual elders i would like to bring here has been asked by the united nations to try to. you know
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work with the various countries involved with syria to try to to try to get this problem result and. so since you asked am i happy with the world obviously syria is a miserable place and it needs to be resolved it should be a top priority i think of every caring politician to get to get this problem result was about the time when you were editing the magazine and you started up a magazine trying to stop the war in vietnam from what i understand do you think journalism can actually change the world and the course of things that is happening oh i think journalists can certainly change the world the internet can change the world i mean it was through the internet and through journalism in the public. the arab spring happen on twitter and google plus and facebook. if you have followers and you want to try to sort out a problem in the world and you get other friends who got it begin. plans to do the
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same you can sort these problems that i campaigned a lot for the oceans to try to stop people killing sharks in the oceans and you know we got quite a lot of laws changed around the world thanks to. the internet. so yes i think journalism is that. the public work and it's a very important but journalism can go to extremes this was special what we're seeing happen with international where do you think and the u.k. in journalism has had this responsible journalism in the u.k. and there's irresponsible journalism one or two newspapers that are very very sort of extreme in their thinking and i suspect we need more but sorry but the good thing is that the internet is counterbalancing that i think we used to have a newspaper. called the daily mail it's ready for people in a so i think a slightly negative way but i think the internet will hopefully start balance like
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that it now and what's your take on the western powers of today for example julian assange. hero or at the end what's your point i would not call him a hero or a villain i think that the mistake he made was not editing he had an incredible information and he could have made thousands of great stories without without putting it life some people some people around the world i'm think perhaps he just went a bit too far generally i'm all for one hundred percent freedom of the press but i think in that situation you know there were definitely we had that would take a lot of dealings in zimbabwe trying to bring about democracy and then suddenly we saw what we were doing and tried to bring about democracy appear so robert mugabe could say that you sometimes you don't want a dictator is is being doing bad things to find out. that other people are trying to bring about democracy you know you can put light. now
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your brain that's mean much to their friends and their children's upbringing and if we talk about. right now in case you think that i have cause because i'm seeing the riots take place in two thousand and eleven for our. life right now and their lack of motivation i think. i'm not as politically minded. that they were when in the sixty's when. they should have they should have. been the big demonstration of the set of even bigger demonstrations. i think if anything the. vocal enough this generation i think that when politicians. take. the. easy to start. to stop.
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politicians should be clever enough to get rid of leaders. without having to. the people and. i think the young people there are there are too many people out of lloyd and i think personally that nobody should be allowed to be unemployed i think you can share the jobs that are available you can share with everybody which might mean that people have a three day weekend instead of a two day weekend whatever but there is room to make sure that everybody has a job and i think that would result a lot of the problems of the world a little bit of a general question now which just say you are a dreamer visionary or an entrepreneur are all about and what's more than i dream big and then i try to make my dreams become reality. i dreamt of going into the mood one day and. decided not to wait for the russian
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spaceship company or the american spaceship company we built you know we're building our own spaceships to take us into space i think everybody should try to dream above what they're capable of and then try try to catch up with your dreams and now fortunately imprint secular and everything that happened recently. that i know you're fighting for it's. what's next. it's also has a large business section we think. the kind of people in moscow would want to use between that and he threat. that flying from gatwick. very small plane is not such a good idea so we think we think the civil aviation authority made the wrong decision but obviously the ideal. is that you have three carriers flying
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to moscow i mean if. you have flying people into this country the better and they're paid a lot of rumors about you and russia very often frequently have one strand. in the country or any other projects perhaps taking place is there anything less well i mean today we were going to be doing a lot in russia today we announced that. we were going to set up. a lot of money. trying to reduce people's energy output. in a positive way that. russia's had all this oil and therefore they never really tried to preserve energy and if you can preserve energy. then you can export more oil you know with three hundred billion dollars into russia or into trying to
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invest. companies that come up with good ways of saving energy but nothing in particular right now that you can mention the virgin green fund which we're going to start from from today but we'll be looking at mobile phones we'll be looking at quite a lot of other investments as well last question. look if i get regretted anything i'd be a very sad person i mean i've just had the most incredible fantastic. lots of adventures. created three other companies just had a blast is surrounded by wonderful people. been married to the same lady. great children. their regrets. for yourself have faced a number of times especially on your travels on a hot air balloon race across the ocean what made you to own for and over again i
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can imagine must have been so painful for your family as well the amount of could find out who probably have rights and i love the child i always love a challenge great difficulty and if somebody says. nobody around the world in a balloon or. nobody's. to say well let's try. and i'm sure it wasn't easy. but now my children are doing it with. the highest margin in europe a couple of months ago we. have together across the channel we're going to space together. so my children i think understand why i like to live life to it's full of. that with me as your wife happy with the fact that your children are out and we exact same thing to you i don't think she's. wildly happy but she certainly loves children doing what they want to do and that's i think that's what.
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we do we try not to take unnecessary. either way we have wonderful exciting challenges but i tried to make it so i bring the children i just want to thank you thank you so much for joining us like you. to me speak your language. programs and documentaries in arabic it's all here on. reporting from the world talks but specifically ip interviews intriguing stories are you. trying. to find out more visit our big teeth.
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